Hi folks,
You all have been instrumental to my self-hosting journey, both as inspiration and as a knowledge base when I’m stumped despite my research.
I am finding various different opinions on this and I’m curious what folks here have to say.
I’m running a Debian server accessible only within the home with a number of docker images like paperless-ngx, jellyfin, focalboard, etc. Most of the data actually resides on my NAS via NFS.
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Is /mnt or /media the correct place to mount the directories. Is mounting it on the host and mapping the mount point to docker with a bind the best path here?
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Additionally, where is the best place to keep my docker-compose? I understand that things will work even if I pick weird locations, but I also believe in the importance of convention. Should this be in the home directory of the server user? I’ve seen a number of locations mentioned in search results.
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Do I have to change the file perms in the locations where I store the docker compose or any config files that don’t sit on the other end of NFS?
Any other resources you wish to share are appreciated. I appreciate the helpfulness of this community.
I found this to be extremely underperforming. If you plan on doing anything that requires high throughput, don’t use the docker NFS operator.
There’s no difference between using a volume in Compose to mount a share or your server’s fstab file. Both do the same kind of mount.
It’s doing something different, I was using to mount an AWS FSx for ZFS share on a beefy machine (1.2GB/s network throughput) and was getting less than 50MB/s throughput using docker to mount it, but getting the full 1.2GB/s when mounted outside and mapped to a volume in the container.
How did you mount it outside the cluster? Did you have a look at the mtab and used the exact same options in the compose file?